Definition, Meaning & Anagrams | English word GORES


GORES

Definitions of GORES

  1. plural of gore.
  2. inflection of gore
  3. A German surname from German.

10

Number of letters

5

Is palindrome

No

9
ES
GO
GOR
OR
ORE
RE
RES

3

7

16

113
EG
EGO
EGR
EGS
EO
EOG
EOR
EOS
ER
ERG

Examples of Using GORES in a Sentence

  • In late 2010, the mill was purchased by the Gores Group and renamed Cosmo Specialty Fibers, which manufactures specialty pulps and exports much of the product to Asia via the deep-water port in Aberdeen.
  • The territory consists of 13 townships and three gores, namely Lang, Davis, Tim Pond, Stetsontown, Jim Pond, Alder Stream, Seven Ponds, Kibby, Chain of Ponds, Massachusetts Gore, Coburn Gore, Skinner, Merrill Strip, Lowelltown, Gorham Gore, and Beattie.
  • Major intersections are often delineated by gores and may be classified by road segments, traffic controls and lane design.
  • When the District was established in 1790, the families that had been dispossessed to make way for the capital city, including the Gores, reaped significant financial rewards.

  • About two weeks after the story arrived, we had a dinner party, mainly for MWA (Mystery Writers of America) and book dealer friends, and Joe Gores got to talking about some of the really hideous language misuse he had seen in recent anthology submissions and had brought along a few of the most egregious.
  • In March 2001, Gores Technology Group sold The Learning Company's entertainment division (which included games originally published by Broderbund, Mattel Interactive, Mindscape and Strategic Simulations) to them.
  • However, in 2018, Gilbert and Gores and the Ford family would "not move forward with this proposed retrofit, because the risks that would inhere to such an undertaking would substantially outweigh the rewards".
  • Gores at exit ramps occasionally feature impact attenuators, especially when something solid follows the theoretical or physical gore, such as a bridge abutment.
  • Also Hondius had engraved charts in the Mariners Mirrour (1588) and the gores for the first English globes, those of Emery Molyneux completed in 1592.
  • An aggressive rhino gores the Indian's leg during a pursuit; the crew transports him to Arusha hospital, where French marksman Charles "Chips" Maurey approaches them, wanting the Indian's job.
  • Ferguson had some Senex gores re-engraved by a certain James Mynde, showing Admiral Anson's voyages of the years 1740–1744.
  • In 1789 the Gores realized a windfall from his financial speculations and acquired the trappings of high society in Massachusetts.
  • In Maine, it seems, due to the extent of unorganized area, the Census Bureau typically lumps contiguous townships, gores, and the like together into larger units called "unorganized territories" (UTs), which are then treated as MCDs.
  • The Essex-Caledonia-Orleans District includes all of the Essex County towns of Averill, Brighton, Canaan, East Haven, Ferdinand, Lemington, Lewis, and Norton, the gores of Avery's Gore, and Warren's Gore, the grant of Warner's Grant, the Caledonia County town of Newark, and the Orleans County town of Westmore.
  • Knitted garments are often more form-fitting than woven garments, since their elasticity allows them to contour to the body's outline more closely; by contrast, curvature is introduced into most woven garments only with sewn darts, flares, gussets and gores, the seams of which lower the elasticity of the woven fabric still further.
  • Daywear also had to be functional, but it never lost its touch of elegance or femininity, as the dresses would still naturally highlight the female or womanly shape: with cinched waistlines, skirts fitted to the hip and fullness added to the hem with flared gores or pleats.
  • Joint torque in fabric spacesuits is minimized by the careful placement of gores, convolutes, and pleats into the fabric structure.
  • Pressure suit joints are often constructed of alternating gores and convolutes of material constrained by cables or straps along the sides of the joint, producing an accordion-like structure that flexes with nearly constant volume to minimize the mechanical work which must be done by the suit occupant.
  • Gaps and gores are portions of land areas that do not conform to boundaries found in cadastre and other land surveys based upon imprecise measurements and other ambiguities of metes and bounds.
  • In the Covenant Code, if an ox gores a slave, the ox owner must pay the servant's master a 30 shekel fine.
  • The Gores oversaw a complete redecoration, the addition of a new dining-room table, new furniture for the library, and a substantial renovation of the grounds and porches to make them more suitable for outdoor entertaining.
  • Wally Ross's spinnakers, in particular, transferred the radial gores for the head into the shoulders and stopped at the center panels or center section, where aerodynamic loads were minor and craft techniques prejudiced the older cross-cut panel alignment.
  • Gores is considered one of the most prolific investors in the SPAC space, having created 13 SPACs, more than any other single investor, and The Gores Group is considered a premier SPAC sponsor.



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